“Draw
whatever you want" is
all I said but no one needed me to get them going in this
direction.The
participants included children from the USA group, and Kosovar
children in Liz Shropshire’s music program, and children
of earliest elementary age through high school from one school
“ZR” in Gjakove, Dujake Village School, a Roma
school within Gjakove and Slovene Village.
The drawings became
mixed up deliberately when and accident upon unloading finished
this project “by chance” (Marcel Duchamp would
understand).
There were enough
examples of strength from each place as to merit unity over
separation. If I were to draw attention to any salient feature
of difference it would involve Slovene Village, where the
overall vision was narrower. These children had as much in
them but many had been born there or lived much of their lives
there. Their architectural images were plainer, less ornate,
there were less objects in their images in general.
At this camp the
only destroyed images occurred when one little boy drew for
most of 3-hours and finished by ripping his pictures (violent
layers of dense crayon systems of mostly straight marks-non
objective) into pieces and throwing them under the desks nearby.
Looking at this kids’ world is consistent with living
in a box where the public toilets are a hole in the ground
flooded by a collapsing floor; where piles of garbage and
excrement are the norm.
Outside of this
singular example everyone else is telling a different story-thesis,
hour after hour. Images of peaceful scenes, hope, suns, balloons,
favorite animals, colorful rainbows, and picture frames were
common themes. Bridges, swimming, boats, sailing, mountains
(Gjakove is a valley surrounded by beautiful hills and mountains).
Block-letter designs abound, usually with names or places,
always showing pride and often ability. 3-dimensional rendering,
recessional spaces, perspective images can be found in each
classroom.The
children and adults from home who helped in the art class
are mixed in with the Kosovar children. Some of these children,
mostly musicians, could pursue visual arts as well. All were
very willing and generous with their efforts to help and share
and all set a great example by always working hard and using
their imagination and creative abilities.

The collaborative
figure made by Ben, Nick, Katy and Joe is interesting and
beautiful piece that seems to me to sum up and symbolize our
trip in general. NO one told them what to do; they shaped
this themselves with a powerful and imaginative result. Emma,
Fitore, Ben, Shqiprim are all people who draw instinctively
but others too numerous to list showed wonderful efforts.
Nick and Sam both stepped into simple pencil and eraser images
of great depth and imagination; Sam, using his unbroken arm,
not the one he thought did all the drawing, produced and effort
any art major in college could learn from. (What happens if
one doesn’t try?) What one sees out of the corner eye
may be more relevant than what is in front of one.
Other often-seen
images contain hopeful homes, flowers, hearts, LOVE spelled
out, basketball courts, symbols of things to stop, i.e.; smoking,
pollution, trash, the dot-patterned hand symbolizing “stop
hurting children” (done by a teen-age Kosovar girl)
reminds me of one of the cultures who have used the hand as
a symbol of signature, Melanesia, Aboriginal, Australian etc.
among others.
A number of portraits
stand out, Blendona, Ben, Blendiana, some unknown, Shqiprim
to name a few. The pencil portrait of their hero Skenderbeg
on horseback seen in profile stands out for the deftness of
touch for a kid willing to draw what many would consider to
be one of the most difficult and sophisticated of compositions,
horse and rider.
In closing I can
only say thanks again and again to Liz Shropshire and the
kids in her program in Gjakove, Kosovo, and to the 31 other
Americans in our group and all of the people who helped us
realize this stage of this project.
I hope to use these
drawings to spread the word visually as an accompaniment to
the music these people are making to bring some peace to this
world in any amount possible.